#angularjs

It’s one thing to upgrade your project from Angular v5 to v6, for example, but it’s another type of headache to migrate your AngularJS application to Angular. Don’t worry though, the Angular team has just unveiled two tools to make the journey as pain-free as possible.

Upwork’s latest Skills Index shows that the top 10 fastest-growing freelance skills list, which includes blockchain, Bitcoin, React.js, deep learning and more jumped over 200 percent compared to the same time period last year. Swift, AngularJS and machine learning have been ousted from the Top 10 list but they are still among the hottest freelance skills.

AngularJS should be among your top considerations when choosing the right JS framework. However, in order to make the selection process fair, it is essential to take into consideration its pros and cons.

What’s so special about Angular 2.0? Is the migration to the new Angular release still going to be a nightmare? And why do we all have to learn TypeScript now? AngularJS author Manfred Steyer answers the most common questions of the Angular community.

New JavaScript library Vue.js has reached milestone 1.0.0, with creator Evan You insipired by the Google-sponsored project Polymer. Vue.js has been described as a set of optional tools that work together really well for frontend developers.

The AngularJS team has finally woken its community up from what was probably the worst nightmare it will ever experience. Plans to update to AngularJS 2.0 without a migration path have now been replaced with a clear outline for a seamless harmony between old and new versions.

How do you decide which new framework to implement? A look at the pros and cons of the Angular, Ember and Backbone JavaScript frameworks and the factors programmers need to consider when make the choice for their project.

AngularJS 1.4 has landed and its contributors have come from far and wide outside of the regular Google Angular team. While most promises have been kept, the JavaScript framework has experienced a small speedbump on the way to Angular 2.

In the lead up to the release of Angular2, the release candidate for AngularJS 1.4 brings a complete rewrite of the internal animation code system, with breaking changes to boot. Various bugfixes round out the release.

The Angular and React teams have met up to discuss how they can work together on similar problems they’re facing. But not everyone is happy about the need to reinvent working tools rather than sharpen them.